On Sun, Mar 13, 2022 at 12:55:45PM +0100, Mario Marietto wrote: > Hello. > > I'm going to ask another question about the behavior,because I want to > understand if I'm dealing with a bug or with a regular method of working. > So,please be patient with me. What I want to achieve is to pass thru two of > my NTFS "formatted" disks to a Windows 11 VM,but without passing them thru > using the USB controller in FreeBSD with a bhyve virtual machine (in the > example below I tried to boot Windows 11 from the nvme disk nvd0. > > I'm using this FreeBSD version : > > *FreeBSD marietto 13.0-RELEASE FreeBSD 13.0-RELEASE #5 > n244809-dff3dead3734: Wed Feb 23 13:16:32 CET > 2022 marietto@marietto:/usr/obj/usr/src/amd64.amd64/sys/GENERIC amd64* > > > I've configured the bhyve VM like this : > > *bhyve -S -c sockets=1,cores=2,threads=2 -m 4G -w -H -A \ > -s 0,hostbridge \ > -s 1,ahci-hd,/dev/nvd0 \ > -s 2,virtio-blk,/dev/da4p2 \ > -s 3,virtio-blk,/dev/da2p1 \ > -s 8,virtio-net,tap4 \ > -s 10,hda,play=/dev/dsp,rec=/dev/dsp \ > -s 29,fbuf,tcp=0.0.0.0:5904 <http://0.0.0.0:5904>,w=1440,h=900 \ > -s 30,xhci,tablet \ > -s 31,lpc \ > -l bootrom,/usr/local/share/uefi-firmware/BHYVE_BHF_CODE.fd \ > vm4 < /dev/null & sleep 2 && vncviewer 0:4* As explained last time, you're bringing this up to the wrong audience. This mailing list is about virt-manager, which uses libvirt and QEMU behind the scenes, but you're using none of those pieces of software. We are simply unable to help you. The FreeBSD forum looks like a reasonable place to discuss the issue and possibly track it down to bugs in bhyve. If the bugs turn out to be on the guest driver side instead, then I think https://github.com/virtio-win/kvm-guest-drivers-windows/ would be your best bet. Good luck! -- Andrea Bolognani / Red Hat / Virtualization